Project #4546

Drought Management In a Changing Climate: Using Cost-Benefit Analyses to Assist Drinking Water Utilities

$152,234
Completed
Principal Investigator
Julie
Blue
Research Manager
Ms. Maureen Hodgins
Contractor
The Cadmus Group, Inc.
Climate Adaptation
Climate Risk Assessment
Risk Assessment
Resilience

Abstract

This project improves drinking water utility understanding of system-specific vulnerabilities to droughts by providing guidance on assessing the costs and benefits of leading practices in drought management and risk mitigation. The final report helps water customers, boards of governance, and other stakeholders better understand the total possible costs of drought and improve acceptance of drought planning and mitigation measures to minimize these costs. Project findings are also helpful to the greater scientific community in tackling fundamental questions on the application of cost-benefit tools. In addition to the report, an Example Cost-Benefit Analysis is available to download from Project Resources/Project Papers. This project is funded by NOAA. It was submitted in response to the competitive funding opportunity entitled, Coping with Drought with the National Integrated Drought Information System (NIDIS), from the Sectoral Applications Research Program administered by the NOAA Climate Program Office. Published in 2015.